Scott Thybony Commentaries

Theodore Roosevelt was a larger-than-life presence on the American scene in the years leading up to Arizona statehood. Commentator Scott Thybony tells us about the president's first, and most momentous, trip to the Grand Canyon. It would set the stage for the Canyon to become a national park.

A young German reached the summit of Elaine Castle on October 11, 1982. He was engaged in an epic trek, determined to be the first person to hike the length of Grand Canyon on both sides of the river. Before starting out, Robert Benson had overstayed his visa and taken an American name from a tombstone.

Commentator Scott Thybony began putting down roots in northern Arizona when he herded sheep for a Navajo family in the winter of 1972. That spring, he switched from a hogan to a tent on the South Rim and has continued to explore the Grand Canyon ever since. Scott Thybony reflects on the beginning of a lifelong love affair with the Canyon.

A music teacher from New York state headed west in 1894 and fell in love with a canyon guide. Ada Bass, I learned, became the first pioneer woman to raise a family at Grand Canyon. Beyond that I knew little about her, so arranged to meet her great grandson to find out more. “The Canyon holds a lure,” Robert Lauzon tells me. “The beauty of the place caught the women. They were struck by the magnificence, and by the roughness. ”